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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 67.128.13.66 (talk) at 00:45, 12 October 2007 (→‎First to run assembly?). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

What year, to be exact, was the TI-85 discontinued?? 66.245.28.250 00:42, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC)

TiCalc.org no longer points to a useful site, so I have removed its link in the TI-85 article. -Chrono 04:30, 2 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

That was an April Fool's joke. Re-adding. --72.145.221.129 10:06, 31 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

First to run assembly?

"This development made the TI-85 the first graphing calculator that allowed assembly programs."

The HP-48_series had out of the box support for machine language programs long before the TI-85 exsited.--DataSurfer 18:52, 11 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I have one and it doesn't support assembly, at least not in an offical fashion. You can compile assembly programs and upload them to run on hacked ROMS, but that works on all of the calculators that allow you to upload new ROM.

EDIT: Sorry, that should probably be 'firmware,' not ROM, but you catch my drift. -Njyoder - 72.75.49.245 08:29, 5 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Bugs

One of the worst things that can happen: loss of your programs and data painstakingly keyed in on that keyboard did happen. Not just to the loss off all battery power, but the very power saving mode turning off the Ti-85 during compilation would cause a nasty data loss crash.

The Computer link was a saving grace. The 1.1 link version did not allow you to edit things on your computer. The 2nd version of the link was gray in color and did allow you to edit your programs on the computer and then upload them to the Ti-85